Main content
Ancient Mediterranean + Europe
Course: Ancient Mediterranean + Europe > Unit 4
Lesson 4: New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period- New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period, an introduction
- Temple of Amun-Re and the Hypostyle Hall, Karnak
- Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut and Large Kneeling Statue, New Kingdom, Egypt
- The tomb-chapel of Nebamun
- Paintings from the Tomb-chapel of Nebamun
- A bottle and a toy: Objects from daily life
- Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and Three Daughters
- Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and Three Daughters
- Portrait head of Queen Tiye with a crown of two feathers
- Thutmose, Bust of Nefertiti
- Thutmose, Bust of Nefertiti: backstory
- Thutmose Bust of Nefertiti
- Tutankhamun’s tomb (innermost coffin and death mask)
- Head of Tutankhamun from the Amarna Period of Egypt’s New Kingdom
- Last Judgement of Hunefer, from his tomb
- Hunefer, Book of the Dead
- Ancient Egyptian papyrus in the Book of the Dead Exhibition
- Last Judgement of Hunefer
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and Three Daughters
House Altar depicting Akhenaten, Nefertiti and Three of their Daughters, limestone, New Kingdom, Amarna period, 18th dynasty, c.1350 BCE (Ägyptisches Museum/Neues Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin). Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Want to join the conversation?
- What do you think prompted this pharoh to ditch the old gods and institute the new god Aten? What changes did this bring to the way egyptians worshiped?(30 votes)
- No one is really sure. Here is a website that has a few theories at why these reforms may have occurred. http://www.heptune.com/Akhnaten.html(23 votes)
- "...you can see hands at the end of those rays....". How do we know they are suppose to be hands? They look more like leaves to me. :) 4:06(9 votes)
- They do look more like leaves but we can see that they are holding the Ankhs. So whether they are leaves or hands they seem to be acting like hands.(17 votes)
- Did his children try to carry this religion on to the next generation? If so, why did it fail?(16 votes)
- The priests weren't real big on having their power taken away, so once Tutankhamun became pharaoh the priests did what they could to get their power back. Following rulers dismantled temples (which had been abandoned) and eventually there was an attempt to basically write any evidence of Atenism out of history.(2 votes)
- I think I watched a documentary once where they said Nefertiti herself reinstituted polytheism after her husband's death to basically make nice with the priests. Was that right?
Anyway, I remember seeing a really pretty naturalistic statue of her once. She's always been my favorite pharaoh.(11 votes)- We don't really know the motive, only that everything changed back almost immediately.(1 vote)
- If Aten was a sun god, then what sort of god Amun, the previous god, was? Mentioned at. 0:30(8 votes)
- Possible answers to your question might be found at:
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/26.7.1412
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amun(6 votes)
- Why are the daughters depicted so small?(4 votes)
- The size of the people in Egyptian art has to do with their importance. The pharaoh is always big. Akhenaten liked Nefertiti a lot, so she's almost as big. Plus, they said in the video that these two are the only people with direct access to the god(s). That would make them pretty important - and so they're big in pictures. The children are not as important, so they are much smaller. It's not that the children actually were that size, it's just emphasizing that they are not as important or powerful as their parents.(6 votes)
- I remember seeing a program on television that said that Akhenaten was in fact "out of proportion" and that his pointy skull, narrow shoulders, and large waist, were a result of inbreeding which was a common practice amongst royal families. Is this fact or is it one of the many theories?(3 votes)
- It's one of many theories. There are also theories which say he may have been androgynous, a hermaphrodite, etc.(2 votes)
- What is the significance of the single ray without an ankh hitting Nefertiti's forehead?(4 votes)
- It was probably just a mistake. The extended line doesn't seem to have any significance of it's own.(0 votes)
- Beth Harris "Do you realise that "Akhenaten" does not mean "The Aten is Happy" ? It means "Effective Spirit of the Aten". I think you are confusing it with "Amenhotep" = "Amen is happy/content". Thank you(2 votes)
- After Akhenaten's death (when religion went back to the way it had been before), did art revert back to the traditional styles too? Or did the Amarna style continue to influence later art?(1 vote)
- From the author:Style quickly reverted to traditional forms.(3 votes)
Video transcript
STEVEN ZUCKER: So
around 1350 BC, everything changed
in Egyptian art. BETH HARRIS: When we
think about Egyptian art, we don't think of change. STEVEN ZUCKER: That's true. The Old Kingdom, the Middle
Kingdom, the New Kingdom, and the transitional
periods between-- art is consistent for
almost 3,000 years. But there is this radical
break right around 1350. And it's because the ruler,
Akhenaten, changes the state religion. BETH HARRIS: He changes it from
the worship of the god Amun to a new god, a sun
god, called Aten. So he actually
changes his own name to Akhenaten, which
means Aten is pleased. The key is he makes him and his
wife the only representatives of Aten on earth. And so he upsets the
entire priesthood of Egypt by making him and his
wife the only ones with access to
this new god, Aten. STEVEN ZUCKER: And in
fact, after Akhenaten dies, Egypt will return to its
traditional religion. So this period is a very brief
episode in Egyptian history, but it also marks a
real shift in style. And this small stone plaque
that we're looking at, this sunken relief
carving-- which would have been placed in a
private domestic environment-- is a perfect example of
those stylistic changes. BETH HARRIS: Right. It would have been an
altar in someone's home, where they would have seen
Akhenaten and his wife Nefertiti and their
relationship to the god Aten. This has always been one
of my favorite sculptures. It's so informal, compared
to most Egyptian art. We really have a
sense of a couple and their relationship
with one another and their relationship
with their children. And love and domesticity. STEVEN ZUCKER: So let's
take a close look. On the left, you have
Akhenaten himself. This is the pharaoh of
Egypt, the supreme ruler. You can see that he's
holding his eldest daughter, and he's actually getting
ready to kiss her. He seems to be holding her very
tenderly, supporting her head, holding her under the thighs. She seems to be, perhaps,
pointing back to her mother at the same moment. BETH HARRIS: We see Nefertiti
holding another daughter on her lap, pointing back
to Akhenaten, and yet a third daughter, the
youngest one, on her shoulder, playing with her earring. And I think it's
immediately apparent that there's something
wrong with their anatomy. If we look at the
children, or we look at Nefertiti
or Akhenaten, we see swollen bellies, very thin
arms, and elongated skulls, forms that have made
historians wonder whether there was something
medically wrong with Akhenaten. STEVEN ZUCKER: In fact, we
don't think that there was. We think that this is a
purely stylistic break. It was meant to distinguish
this new age, this new religion, from Egypt's past. BETH HARRIS:
Egyptian art had been dominated by rectilinear forms. Here, Akhenaten
seems to be demanding this new style dominated
by curvilinear forms. STEVEN ZUCKER: Look at
the careful attention to the drapery. There is a softness
throughout that is an absolute contrast to the
traditions of Egyptian art. But in some ways,
there are elements of traditional
Egyptian sculpture. BETH HARRIS: Right. We still see a composite
view of the body. A profile view of the face,
but a frontal view of the eye. STEVEN ZUCKER: Right. Or one hip is facing us. But the shoulders
are squared with us. So as much of the body is
exposed to us as possible, while the figures
are still in profile. So let's take a look at some
of the iconography here. This little panel
really tells us a lot. God is present. Aten is present, here
rendered as the sun disk. And from that sun-- which
has a small cobra in it, which signifies that this is the
supreme deity, the only deity. Akhenaten was a monotheist. And this was in such contrast
to the pantheon of gods that traditional Egyptian
religion counted on. Here Akhenaten says, no,
there is only one true god. So we can see the cobra. We can see the sun disk. And then we can see rays
of light that pour down. And if you look closely,
you can see hands at the ends of those rays,
except for the rays that terminate right at the
faces of the king and queen. And there, you see not
only hands, but also ankhs, the Egyptian sign of life. And so it's as if Aten is
giving life to these two people, and these two people alone. BETH HARRIS: Those rays of light
are holding those ankhs right at the noses, the breath of life
for Akhenaten and Nefertiti. We can see in the throne of
Nefertiti symbols of both Upper and Lower Egypt, indicating
that Nefertiti is queen of both. STEVEN ZUCKER: Akhenaten himself
is sitting on a simpler throne. It does give a sense of
her importance and the fact that they would
rule Egypt together.